Sunday, August 29, 2010

Mi Trabajo

For the past week or so I have been getting oriented to my position at Iglesia Luterana Cristo Rey.  This church not only holds a powerful presence within the El Paso community, but the larger Lutheran community as well.  It serves as a beacon of hope for the population that it caters to within the neighborhood.  The Cristo Rey community is comprised almost exclusively of first-generation Mexican immigrants and their families, but all are welcome to take advantage of the many services that are provided.  No questions are asked as individuals walk through our doors.  Cristo Rey provides an afterschool program for local children, a health ministry, a border immersion experience for visiting groups, english classes, and anything and everything that the community needs.  The church ministers to individuals from both sides of the border and has various partnerships with social service agencies in both El Paso and Juarez.

My position within the Cristo Rey community officially is director of the Border Immersion Experience.  I am responsible for recruiting groups, planning activities, providing sources for education about the border, and guiding groups through their experience en la frontera.  Although my position with he church is director of the immersion program, I am counted on by the very short-staffed church to do really anything and everything.  I am taking on the task of helping with the afterschool program and teaching a weekly ESL class as well.  In short, I will always have something to do, and when immersion groups come through the church I will be counted on to work 60-80 hour weeks.  Although my daily tasks seem overwelming at this point, the work that I am counted on to do is what I want to be doing.  I enjoy this type of work and know that it is more fullfilling for me than anything else I can be doing.  Through interactions with the community, I am learning more than I could have ever desired to learn in textbooks and college classes.  I am learning about life, about the struggles that millions of individuals face every day, about a population living in the shadows scorned by the racist "pundits" on FOXnews.  I am learning spanish, not from the textbook, but from the true prophets of the border, the individuals that put their lives on the line to ensure the safety and well being of their families.

I am proud to say that I work at Cristo Rey.  Cristo Rey keeps impoverished children off the streets, ensures the health and well-being of thousands of individuals on both sides of the border, and introduces hundreds of individuals across the country to the border region as develop true relationships with the community.  Cristo Rey works not to provide a voice for the voiceless, but as translator for individuals with a loud, clear, and articulate voice that aren't heard because they are speaking another language and ignored by their host country.  It ensures that America continues to be the country built by immigrants, not the country that was built by immigrants.  I am working at a social service agency, disguised as a simple church located in a prime position to minister to those that need it most.  As I continue to become acquanted with the ins and outs of my work I will share.  I plan to write something about the actual fence and border patrol in the coming week. 

3 comments:

  1. Once again, thank you Thomas. I feel as if I am on the journey with you. I look forward to your continuing posts and your views. There is so much for us all to learn through your experiences.

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  2. so very, very proud of you. thinking of you and wishing you the safest journey with those you walk with this year... from the immersion college kids to those in your classes.
    i can't wait to hear what's going on with the actual border.
    sending love,
    julie

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  3. Love your blog Tom!! I am sure you will do your work with the utmost dignity and class. As for the racist pundits--I hear that Rush Limbaugh is traveling to El Paso to "reclaim the dignity" of REAL immigrants, meaning the white people who immigrated here FIRST. What a freaky world we live in...

    P.S. I was trying to make that a pun on Glenn Beck but it doesn't really make sense and is said in jest.

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